How does the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade affect the Cavs?

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MARCH 09: Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks is defended by Jarrett Allen #31 of the Cleveland Cavaliers during the second half of a game at Fiserv Forum on March 09, 2025 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Milwaukee Bucks shook up the Eastern Conference landscape when they sent two-time MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo to the Miami Heat for an underwhelming trade package centered around Tyler Herro and multiple first-round picks.

The Cleveland Cavaliers weren’t one of the reported teams in the mix for Giannis’s services, even though there were rumblings that the Bucks were eyeing Evan Mobley as the centerpiece for a possible Giannis trade a few months ago. So what does this all mean for the Cavs?

First, it’s important to acknowledge that there’s another contender in the East.

The bar for entry into the title conversation is lower than it’s been before this era of parity. Teams that have talent, a clear identity, and can enforce that identity on their opponents can have playoff success even if their rosters aren’t perfect. Groups like the Toronto Raptors, Atlanta Hawks, and Detroit Pistons are examples that did that well in the playoffs.

Miami has the tools to do the same.

They have the talent to be a formidable defense with a Bam Adebayo and Giannis-led front court, and perimeter pests like Davion Mitchell and Norman Powell (if they’re able to retain him in free agency). This should be an imposing half-court defense that generates plenty of turnovers with Erik Spoelstra’s patented zone.

Offensively, they will be potent in transition. Miami was already one of the league’s quickest offenses. That trend should continue as they likely won’t have the shooting or guard play to be an elite half-court attack. Antetokounmpo is elite in the open court. You’d expect them to leverage that as much as possible.

It typically takes teams a few years to build around a new star. The Heat won’t be the fully optimized version of a Giannis-led team for likely several years. But that doesn’t mean they won’t be a threat to the Cavs in the interim.

Cleveland has had issues against rangy defensive teams that can push it in transition. Their Donovan Mitchell and James Harden-led backcourt has struggled with turnovers in matchups where they don’t have the size or athletic advantage. And Cleveland’s oversized front court isn’t much use defensively if they aren’t able to get set up in the half-court. This is why the Cavs struggled so much against the Raptors in the first round this past season.

Miami — even in its current, imperfect construction — projects to be a better version of the Raptors. They have better backline defenders and should be much more explosive offensively in the open court with Giannis. They also have the strength up front to bully the Cavs. A more talented version of Toronto isn’t a team the Cavs want to face, at least not with Cleveland’s current roster.

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Second, the Giannis trade should open up the floodgates on other moves around the league.

The Boston Celtics made Jaylen Brown available in their pursuit of Giannis. Now that they didn’t get that deal done, is Brown someone who could be dealt? And if so, is this someone the Cavs could have interest in?

What we do know is that Mitchell and Brown are good friends. We also know that the Cavs have done everything within their power to make moves that Mitchell approves of. Trading for a former Finals MVP and someone who fills a hole in the roster would make sense. Although figuring out a deal that works for both sides would be difficult — especially if Mobley isn’t on the table.

Brown wouldn’t be the only player who could be more available after the Giannis trade has gone through. Would the Bucks entertain moving on from Myles Turner? Is Kawhi Leonard the next star player to change teams? Could Trey Murphy III finally be on the move? Is Tyler Herro destined for a new home? What about Anthony Edwards? Presumably, the Cavs could get involved in any potential deal, even as a third team.

The Cavs typically don’t telegraph their moves. If they were to do something drastic, we likely wouldn’t know about it until the deal is nearly finalized, as we saw with the Harden trade this February.

All we can say for certain right now is that there’s a new contender in the East. We’ll see in the coming months whether the Cavs can remake their roster in a conference that will be much deeper next season.

Avast!: Mariners at Pirates Series Preview

DENVER, COLORADO - JUNE 21: Endy Rodriguez #13 of the Pittsburgh Pirates celebrates his fourth inning two-run home run against the Colorado Rockies with Bryan Reynolds #10 in a game at Coors Field on June 21, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Count me shocked that the Mariners were able to win one of their games against that trio of lefty starters the Red Sox rolled out last weekend. That win on Sunday wrapped up a 3-3 homestand and pushed the team another game ahead of their division rivals. Now the team embarks on a midwest road trip through Pittsburgh and Cleveland.

GameTimeMariners StarterPirates StarterMariners Win%Pirates Win%
Game 1Tuesday, June 23 | 3:40 pmRHP George KirbyRHP Mitch Keller51.6%48.4%
Game 2Wednesday, June 24 | 3:40 pmRHP Bryan WooRHP Braxton Ashcraft49.1%50.9%
Game 3Thursday, June 25 | 9:35 amRHP Bryce MillerRHP Bubba Chandler49.7%50.3%
*Game odds courtesy of FanGraphs
OverviewMarinersPiratesEdge
Batting (wRC+)102 (7th in AL)107 (3rd in NL)Pirates
Fielding (FRV)-20 (14th)-15 (15th)Pirates
Starting Pitching (FIP-)89 (3rd)87 (2nd)Pirates
Bullpen (FIP-)90 (2nd)103 (10th)Mariners

With a ton of young talent matriculating into the big leagues and a starting rotation anchored by Paul Skenes, the Pirates looked poised to break out of their long rebuilding cycle this year. They actually spent money on a few free agents in the offseason and traded for some more talent to bolster the lineup. They were rewarded with a quick start to the season, running a 16-11 record through April 25. They’ve fallen back towards .500 since then, though they’re still in the thick of the NL Wild Card hunt. 

PlayerPositionBatsPAK%BB%ISOwRC+
Spencer Horwitz1BL28813.2%13.5%0.179137
Brandon Lowe2BL31725.6%10.4%0.265126
Bryan ReynoldsLFR33521.2%14.6%0.197145
Ryan O’HearnRFL25722.6%7.8%0.176115
Nick Gonzales3BR29217.8%5.5%0.081100
Endy RodriguezCS8523.5%18.8%0.176133
Marcell OzunaDHR21729.0%8.8%0.11764
Jake MangumCFS17616.5%5.7%0.063101
Jared TrioloSSR15225.0%7.9%0.04467

The Pirates signed Ryan O’Hearn to the largest free agent contract for a position player in franchise history this offseason. That’s pretty incredible from an organizational standpoint and that it ended up being O’Hearn who set that record. To his credit, O’Hearn has been a solid first baseman and corner outfielder for the past three years and he’s been just as good for the Pirates this season, rocking a 115 wRC+. They also traded for Brandon Lowe and that has worked out wonderfully; he’s leading the team in home runs with a 126 wRC+. Among the holdovers from last year, Bryan Reynolds has bounced back from a dismal season in 2025 to lead the team with a 145 wRC+. Unfortunately for the Pirates, young phenom Konnor Griffin has been sidelined with a forearm injury for the past month.

Probable Pitchers 

Updated Stuff+ Explainer 

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Mitch Keller82.118.4%8.8%8.6%40.6%5.253.98
George Kirby9021.1%5.6%10.1%50.4%4.103.42
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam39.3%38.5%93.49378980.380
Sinker35.2%12.8%92.388123600.429
Cutter4.1%10.8%89.983841350.246
Changeup1.9%15.2%88.98185630.348
Curveball3.3%13.5%78.289110720.295
Slider16.20%9.10%87.5103631020.319
Sweeper37.40%11.50%82.2103661240.277

Mitch Keller has been a solid, if uninspiring mid-rotation starter for the last five years. He’s also been incredibly consistent in that time; his FIP hasn’t risen above 4.08 and hasn’t fallen below 3.80. Despite that consistency, his peripherals look the worst they’ve been since 2021; his strikeout rate has fallen to 18.4% and his walk rate has jumped up to 8.8%. Only some good home run luck has allowed him to keep his FIP inside that range mentioned above. He’s always been a tinkerer, and this year, he’s reintroduced a cutter to his repertoire. The real issue is that his other two fastballs have been crushed by opposing batters and the rest of his secondary pitches haven’t been able to make up the difference.

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Braxton Ashcraft90.226.3%6.0%9.3%46.3%3.183.04
Bryan Woo8924.9%4.5%7.8%35.8%3.943.08
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam26.1%35.9%97.19284990.307
Sinker23.7%8.9%96.81021401000.323
Splitter0.0%8.7%91.987
Curveball20.3%28.4%85.0131126930.207
Slider30.0%18.1%92.01001021210.258

Between Paul Skenes, Konnor Griffin, and a host of other top prospects on the Pirates roster, it’s been easy to overlook Braxton Ashcraft. He was a top prospect in his own right and had a strong debut season last year, compiling a 2.71 ERA and 2.78 FIP in 18 relief appearances and eight starts. The Pirates were pretty cautious with his workload last year but have given him a full-time role in the starting rotation this year and he’s run with the opportunity. He’s got a pair of excellent breaking balls that more than make up for the lack of a strong fastball. Nearly half of his pitch mix is made up of those breaking balls, and their quality is such that he doesn’t really need an offspeed pitch to keep left-handed batters at bay. He can just spin a curveball or bury a slider to a lefty and generate enough swing and miss to thrive.

PitcherIPK%BB%HR/FB%GB%ERAFIP
Bubba Chandler7421.1%13.1%9.4%34.3%4.624.73
Bryce Miller4030.5%3.5%12.5%40.7%1.582.95
PitchUsage vRHBUsage vLHBVelocityStuff+Whiff+BIP+xwOBA
Four-seam51.0%54.3%98.4104991090.345
Sinker12.2%3.6%97.910000
Changeup9.8%26.8%91.893841110.277
Curveball3.0%4.1%85.611400
Slider24.0%11.3%89.71131121120.298
Sweeper11.7%3.9%87.711300

Among the non-Skenes pitching prospects in Pittsburgh’s pipeline, Bubba Chandler had the most hype. And while Ashcraft is having the type of season we expected from Chandler, Chandler probably has the higher ceiling once he fully develops. A lack of command is the biggest area he needs to address — an issue that’s led to a 13.1% walk rate this year. His fastball is fantastic with velocity and carry at the top of the zone. His tremendous arm speed helps his changeup really play up, though he’s still working on developing his trio of breaking balls. Once he figures out his command and finds a bit more consistency, he’ll be a top of the rotation arm for the Pirates. Until then, he’s a work-in-progress.


The Big Picture:

TeamW-LW%Games BehindRun DiffRecent Form
Mariners40-390.506+17L-W-L-L-W
Athletics38-400.4871.5-54L-W-W-L-L
Rangers38-400.4871.5-10L-W-L-W-W
Astros37-430.4633.5-43W-W-L-W-L
Angels32-480.4008.5-41L-L-W-W-L
TeamW-LW%Games BehindRun DiffRecent Form
Rays43-320.573+5.5+7L-W-L-W-L
Guardians41-380.519+1.5-8W-L-W-L-L
Blue Jays39-390.500-23W-W-L-W-W
Athletics38-400.4871.0-54L-W-W-L-L
Rangers38-400.4871.0-10L-W-L-W-W

The Rangers managed to climb back into a tie with the Athletics after winning their weekend series against the Padres and winning the first game of a series against the Marlins yesterday night. For their part, the Athletics wound up splitting their four-game series against the Angels last weekend and will start a three-game set against the Giants tonight. The Astros are also lurking at 3.5 games back in the division; they won their series against the Guardians over the weekend but dropped the first game of their series against the Blue Jays yesterday.

Sabres Notes: Pre-Season Schedule Revealed, Byram, Levi On Pre-Draft Trade Board

The Buffalo Sabres announced on Tuesday their exhibition schedule for the 2026-27 season. The schedule has been reduced to four games, due to the new NHL - NHLPA collective bargaining agreement and the league moving to an 84-game regular season for the first time.

The club will play twice at KeyBank Center and twice on the road in late September, with the regular season slated to begin before the end of the month. The Sabres will open on the road in Pittsburgh against the Penguins on Monday, September 21, and will play at home against the Columbus Blue Jackets on Tuesday, September 22. The final two games will be in Detroit against the Red Wings on Thursday, September 24, and against the Penguins in a Saturday matinee on Saturday, September 26th.  

Other Sabres Stories

Sabres Emotionally Devastated By Game 7 Overtime Loss

The chatter regarding Sabres defenseman Bowen Byram has become red-hot in the days leading up to the NHL Draft at KeyBank Center this weekend. The 26-year-old blueliner is in the second year of a two-year, $12.5 million bridge deal and Buffalo GM Jarmo Kekalainen indicated last month that he is interested in extending the 25-year-old, coming off a career-high 42-point season, but in the last week there have been indicators that Byram is either looking for a new deal well out of the Sabres price range or that he through agent Darren Ferris has communicated that he will to play out the final year of his deal and hit the free agent market next summer.

Sabres trade Michael Kesselring to the San Jose Sharks

Byram is listed only behind Detroit team captain Dylan Larkin on The Athletic’s Trade Board. Kekalainen earlier this month moved out RFA blueliner Michael Kesselring in a deal with the San Jose Sharks, but the big right-hander was not much of a factor witn Buffalo last season The Stanley Cup winner was a big part of the Sabres top four, along with Rasmus Dahlin, Mattias Samuelsson, and Owen Power, and his departure would mark a significant downgrade of their defensive corps. 

The Sabres do not have an obvious replacement for Byram on their roster, with 2025 first rounder Radim Mrtka likely starting his pro career in Rochester next season,  veterans Luke Schenn and Logan Stanley heading for free agency, and righties Conor Timmins and Zach Metsa better suited for bottom-pairing duties. Kekalainen is in a difficult position, since the return for Byram will be mitigated by his contract status and the knowledge that whoever he is traded to will likely be a one-year rental. 

Rochester goalie Devon Levi also appears on the list. The 24-year-old has played most of the last three seasons with the Amerks and will not be waiver exempt next season. With Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen, Alex Lyon, and Colten Ellis on the NHL roster, the Sabres face the prospect of losing the youngster for nothing on waivers after training camp or moving him for a draft pick. With a number of clubs looking for inexpensive starters, tandem goalies and backups, Kekalainen should not have a problem finding a new home for Levi.     

 

Follow Michael on X, Instagram @MikeInBuffalo

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OF Ben Malgeri promoted to Detroit, Brett Callahan and John Peck promoted to Triple-A Toledo

MiLB: APR 08 New Netting at Fifth Third Field

The Detroit Tigers called up outfielder Ben Malgeri on Tuesday, sending utilityman Trei Cruz back to Triple-A Toledo. To open a 40-man roster spot for Malgeri, RHP Burch Smith has been moved to the 60-day injured list. They also announced a lot of promotions throughout the farm system on Tuesday. Typically, the Tigers start moving prospects from around this point in the year until the post-draft, post-trade deadline part of the calendar, so we should see a fair amount of movement over the next 5-6 weeks. The big moves today were the promotion of outfielder Brett Callahan and infielder John Peck from Double-A Erie to Triple-A Toledo.

Cruz didn’t get much of a look at the show, but he wasn’t really swinging the bat to his best ability in Toledo when initially called up. Let him try and heat up and he should be back at some point. Meanwhile, the 26-year-old Malgeri was long thought as just an org outfielder but has really improved his game over the past two seasons. A right-handed hitter who can play center field but is much better suited to the corners, Malgeri hits lefties well but has balanced out his splits more this season. He’s been a popular choice to replace Jahmai Jones, but the Tigers still aren’t there yet. Congrats to Malgeri on making it to the Show.

You can find more on Callahan and Peck on our midseason farm system update on the front page at Bless You Boys. Callahan in particular has been on a tear and the 24-year-old left-handed hitting outfielder is clearly ready for the next challenge. Peck still has a little more work to do in terms of his plate discipline, but the right-handed hitter can play anywhere on the infield including shortstop. The duo are an athletic, well-rounded pair of players on track to give the Tigers some bench and utility options next year, and if they break out further with the bat they could become future regulars.

Reliever Moises Rodriguez, who throws a hellacious sinker that gets up to 100 mph, though more commonly 98, with a pretty good breaking ball, has been placed on the 7-day injured list. He generally throws strikes when he needs to, but still needs to command the sinker at least more consistently to push his way into conversation for the Tigers bullpen. Hopefully it’s a minor injury.

There were plenty of other promotions as right-handed starter Hayden Minton and first baseman Garrett Pennington were promoted from High-A West Michigan to Double-A Erie. Infielder Max Burt will also move up with them to help backfill Peck’s role.

From Lakeland, right-handed starter Charlie Christensen and reliever Eliseo Mota were promoted from Single-A Lakeland to West Michigan. Christensen’s big extension, low arm angle, and nasty slider-changeup combination have given young hitters fits in the Florida State League. He feels like a future reliever, as his sinker is underpowered and relies more on deception than raw stuff, but the 22-year-old out of Central Arkansas, the Tigers’ 13th rounder last summer in the draft, looks like another bargain that is paying off so far. Mota is a 23-year-old right-handed reliever who is underpowered, but has been punching tickets left and right in Lakeland.

Finally, outfielder Patrick Lee has been reinstated to West Michigan from his rehab assignment in the Complex League.

Presumably we’ll get more corresponding moves in the days to come, although some of it may simply be the release of some minor league veteran players brought in to fill out depth roles in the system. News keeps emerging today, and we’ve updated this article twice already as new news rolls in. Apologies for any confusion.

How are the Phillies at the midway point?

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 26: Justin Crawford #2 of the Philadelphia Phillies reacts on Opening Day against the Texas Rangers at Citizens Bank Park on March 26, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The middle of the season is just about here (no, the All-Star Game is not the middle of the season), which means it’s good to stop and take stock of how the Phillies have been doing. It’s pretty simple for me to list all the of the ways that Kyle Schwarber has improved this year and condense it into 800-900 words, but instead, what do you think?

What has surprised you the most this year so far, good or bad?

If there is a “something else”, what is it? Let us know and check back this week for the results and a little bit of digging into it.

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Phillies fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

The Red Sox’ season ended last night in brutal loss to Rockies

Jun 22, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Boston Red Sox pitcher Aroldis Chapman (44) after allowing a hit in the ninth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images | Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

The Boston Red Sox saw their season come to an end during Monday’s sickening loss to the Colorado Rockies.

If we’re all being honest with each other, there were already nails being hammered into the coffin — the utter shit show that was the final two innings of that game just happened to be the final one.

The Red Sox collectively puked on themselves, shit down their legs, and pulled out a gun to shoot themselves in the foot, eventually leading to a 3-2 walk-off loss at Coors Field. Willson Contreras, Masataka Yoshida, and Marcelo Mayer put together useless at-bats while clinging onto a two-run lead. Garrett Whitlock and Aroldis Chapman, both of whom barely pitch anymore, couldn’t get anyone out. Jarren Duran completely butchered the final play of the game, leading to the game-winning run.

It’s about as bad as it sounds, yet was somehow wholly unsurprising.

Boston has been facing an uphill battle for months, with a collection of deep-rooted issues all hindering the performance of the baseball team — the hitting program clearly sucks, identifying quality pitchers has been anything but a consistent endeavor, there was and still continues to be an odd power struggle happening between ownership, the front office, and the coaching staff, etc. I just don’t think people were quite ready to admit that things are as bad as they are… until now.

It’s not like losing to a bad team is enough to declare the season dead, it’s doing it in the fashion they did it. You can’t just start finding new ways to lose at this point! It’s supposed to be formulaic— you fall behind by a couple of runs and the offense isn’t good enough to climb out of a hole. Chapman can’t blow saves! Duran can’t revert back to being a butcher! Yoshida can’t be uncompetitive with a chance to add insurance!

Yet, that’s what happened. The Red Sox officially hit rock bottom, squandering an opportunity to kick off the most important week of their season with an impressive and/or formulaic victory over an inferior opponent.

If they can’t show fight against this team and under these circumstances, they never will.

It’s over folks.

The Red Sox are dead, so enjoy the time off before they get interesting again — which is either when they do something wildly dramatic or after the lockout.

It might be a while…

Islanders Hire Former Stanley Cup Champion Pascal Dupuis As New Director Of Player Development

The New York Islanders announced on Tuesday that they have hired former NHL forward and Stanley Cup champion Pascal Dupuis as their new Director of Player Development. 

This role had been previously held by former Islander Eric Cairns, who had held that role since the 2013-14 season. 

Cairns is no longer involved in hockey operations for the organization. 

Dupuis played 15 years in the NHL after going undrafted, recording 409 points (190 goals, 219 assists). He won the Stanley Cup with the Pittsburgh Penguins back in 2009.

He was forced to retire in December of 2015 due to a medical condition related to blood clots. 

Since 2021-22, Dupuis has owned the QMJHL's Shawinigan Cataractes, serving in different roles, from hockey operations to player development over the years. 

This marks Dupuis first NHL post-career gig. 

Dupuis comes aboard the Islanders at a time when player development has never been more crucial, as the organization has prospects that they're banking on becoming critical pieces over the next few seasons. 

Astros Prospect to Watch: OF Lucas Spence

SAN ANTONIO, TX - APRIL 08: Lucas Spence #14 of the Corpus Christi Hooks rounds the bases during the game between the Corpus Christi Hooks and the San Antonio Missions at Nelson Wolff Stadium on Wednesday, April 8, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas. (Photo by Zach Del Bello/Minor League Baseball via Getty Images)

It is no secret that the Astros OF has performed poorly offensively this season, threatening to be their worst offensive OF of all time.

Young prospects Cam Smith, Brice Matthews, and Zach Cole have not performed well. Former prospect Joey Loperfido has battled both injury and underperformance. CF Jake Meyers has shown none of the contact ability he showed for the first time last season.

In fact, the OF who has hit the best for them that is currently on the active roster (no, Yordan doesn’t count) has been Taylor Trammell, but despite his solid average has a meager OPS as there has been no power in his offense.

LaMonte Wade Jr. performed well in his 4 games with the team before suffering a hamstring injury that currently has him sidelined.

With that, it is notable that the Astros promoted OF Lucas Spence to Triple-A Sugar Land today.

The Astros under GM Dana Brown have shown a propensity to push young players quickly, and Spence is a young lefthanded hitting OF who can play all three OF positions.

According to MLB.com, Spence is currently ranked as the Astros #10 overall prospect. He is considered an above average fielder with a plus arm and plus speed. His hit tool is still a work in progress and he is not considered a power hitter.

However, he has had a tremendous month of June at Double-A Corpus Christi, where he has hit for strong power, as noted in Jimmy Price’s post on X above.

With the Astros OF floundering at the plate, a strong representation from Spence at Triple-A could earn him a call up and an opportunity with the big league club, similar to how Zach Cole got a shot late last season (one that the team liked enough that they had hoped he could take another step forward and claim a regular job this spring, but alas…).

It is certainly worth watching.

Yankees catcher Ali Sánchez placed on paternity list; J.C. Escarra recalled

May 17, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Yankees catcher J.C. Escarra (25) stands on deck during the second inning against the New York Mets at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

The Yankees’ catching carousel keeps moving along, as only days after getting sent down to Triple-A, J.C. Escarra is once again back with the big-league club to replace Ali Sánchez, who was placed on the paternity list. This move comes a day after Sánchez had to leave early in a game against the Tigers, having been hit on the wrist by a four-seam fastball, something we don’t recommend.

Sánchez, who was starting against the left-hander Framber Valdez, was replaced midgame by Austin Wells, who will once again share the catching duties with Escarra, leaving the Yankees currently without a right-handed catching option on the roster. While an X-ray was negative, according to New York Post reporter Greg Joyce, we still await news on a potential CT scan to fully determine the extent of the damage done by this HBP — particularly, whether Sánchez will indeed require an IL stint. In the short term, Sánchez’s wife was expecting anyway, so the roster logistics allow him to go on the paternity list as they welcome a new baby into the world. The Yankees can work out any IL details at a later time.

After right-hander Casey Mize toes the rubber tonight, the Yankees will seemingly face not one, not two, not three, but four consecutive southpaw starters, beginning with the greatest that MLB currently has to offer in Tarik Skubal. If Boston follows its current rotation, then Connelly Early, Payton Tolle, and Jake Bennett will pitch their first three games this weekend. In fact, New York will face Skubal twice in this short period with multiple series against the Tigers, and being obligated to start a lefty catcher at all times is not ideal. So it goes.

Astros SS Jeremy Pena Doesn’t Believe He Will Miss Much Time

TORONTO, ON- JUNE 22 - Jeremy Pena #3 of the Houston Astros steals a base in the first inning as the Toronto Blue Jays play the Houston Astros at Rogers Centre in Toronto. June 22, 2026. Steve Russell/Toronto Star (Steve Russell/Toronto Star via Getty Images) | Toronto Star via Getty Images

Astros SS Jeremy Pena left last night’s game with a cramp in his right hamstring. This is the same hamstring he injured previously in the season (although manager Joe Espada incorrectly identified it as the left hamstring in his post-game presser).

Pena was removed from the game as a precaution as the team doesn’t want him to re-injure himself, particularly at a time when he is playing well and his importance to the team cannot be higher.

Here are Pena’s comments after last night’s game where he explains what happened and that he doesn’t think it will cost him much time:

Yankees vs. Tigers prediction: Odds, recent stats, trends, and best bets for June 23

The New York Yankees (46–31) and the Detroit Tigers (34–44) meet for game 2 of their three-game series tonight at Comerica Park. The Tigers took the opener, 5–3. Riley Greene led Detroit to victory. The slugger homered and reached base three times, while the Yankees’ offense couldn’t overcome a rough outing from Gerrit Cole, who allowed five runs in just over four innings. Framber Valdez earned his fourth win of the season allowing one run over six innings. The Yankees did have baserunners but were just 1-5 with runners in scoring position. That was actually an improvement from the previous two games in which they went a combined 0-22 with ducks on the pond. Anthony Volpe and Paul Goldschmidt each picked up a couple hits for New York. Spencer Torkelson had two hits for Detroit.

 

The loss was the Yankees’ third in a row. It is the first time in over a month they have lost three straight. They will look to snap that skid tonight while the Tigers will look to make it five straight wins. Tampa lost as well last night so New York still holds first place in the AL East by a couple games. With the win, Detroit is now five games back in the Wild Card chase and 6.5 games behind in the AL Central.

 

On the mound, the Yankees turn to Carlos Rodón (3–2, 3.50 ERA), a left-hander who has allowed three earned runs in each of his last two starts without reaching the seventh inning in either. Taking the ball for Detroit will be right-hander Casey Mize (2–4, 2.58 ERA), who was roughed up a bit in his last start allowing three earned runs in just 4.2 innings against Houston. He had not allowed more than two runs in any of his previous seven starts.

 

Lets dive into tonight’s matchup and find a sweat or two.

 

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

 

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

 

Game Details and How to Watch: Yankees vs. Tigers

 

  • Date: Tuesday, June 23, 2026
  • Time: 6:40PM EST
  • Site: Comerica Park
  • City: Detroit, MI
  • Network/Streaming: MLB.TV, YES, Tigers.TV

 

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

 

The Latest Odds: Yankees vs. Tigers

The latest odds as of Tuesday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: New York Yankees (-114), Detroit Tigers (-105)
  • Spread: Yankees -1.5 (+149), Tigers +1.5 (-181)
  • Total: 8.0 runs

 

Starting Pitchers and their Stats: Yankees vs. Tigers for June 23

  • Yankees: Carlos Rodon
    Season Totals: 36.0 IP, 3-2, 3.50 ERA, 1.25 WHIP, 41K, 20 BB
  • Tigers: Casey Mize
    Season Totals: 52.1 IP, 2-4, 2.58 ERA, 1.01 WHIP, 52K, 13 BB

Who’s Hot? Who’s Not! Yankees vs. Tigers

  • Paul Goldschmidt is 3-10 over his last 3 games
  • Anthony Volpe has hit safely in 8 of his last 9 games (13-30)
  • Jazz Chisholm Jr. is 2-7 in his career against Casey Mize
  • Ryan McMahon and Cody Bellinger have each homered against Mize in their careers
  • Colt Keith is 3-5 in his career against Carlos Rodon
  • Riley Greene is 4-12 but has struck out 5 times in his career against Rodon
  • Spencer Torkelson is 5-10 over his last 3 games

 

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

 

Top Betting Trends & Insights: Yankees vs. Tigers

  • The Tigers are 38-40 on the Run Line this season
  • The Yankees are 38-39 on the Run Line this season
  • The OVER has cashed 34 times in games involving Detroit this season (34-40-4)
  • The OVER has cashed 35 times in games involving the Yankees this season (35-38-4)

 

Expert picks & predictions: Yankees vs. Tigers

Rotoworld Bet Best Bet

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Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

 

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

 

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for tonight’s game between the Tigers and the Yankees:

 

  • Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Yankees on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: Rotoworld Bet is staying away from a play on the Run Line.
  • Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total OVER 8.0

 

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American League contenders ranked by World Series chances

Jun 5, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees first baseman Ben Rice (22) celebrates with first baseman Paul Goldschmidt (48) after hitting a solo home run during the first inning against the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

The 2026 American League pennant race is a lot like a drunk cousin at Thanksgiving. Fun for a while as long as the cranberry sauce stays off the floor, we might even get a good story or two, but… how is this actually going to end? 

By my calculations, there are five teams that could currently win the American League but only about 2.5 that could win the World Series. Several preseason contenders (looking at you Boston Red Sox) have just had the worst time, and even the ones that aren’t 14.5 games back in their division before July 4 have to figure out pretty quickly if this is a “we can fix this” year or a “we can fix this next year” year (looking at you Houston Astros). Everyone is scrambling so much we should make some eggs.

With that said, MLB still needs someone to come out of the AL and lose to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series, so we may as well get to work on cleaning up the cranberry sauce off the hardwood. It’s a Top Five and man, did I struggle to get to five — heck, there are only five teams with a winning record; it’s late-June!

5. Cleveland Guardians 

Made Up Award: The “I’m only here for the free Mimosas” Award for team that’s just happy they made the list

“Hey, wait, we are four games above .500 what is this?” Listen, Guardians, you’re lucky you even made this list. The Texas Rangers are sitting in the wing ready to come on stage and take this award if you don’t hush up and just be happy about this. 

Cleveland has not gotten nearly enough press for being a complete analytical fraud when teams like the Rays and St. Louis Cardinals distract the masses. Cleveland scores fewer than four runs per game (only the Red Sox and Padres are worse), has a negative run differential despite leading their division. The AL Central has been putting up hilarious season after hilarious season since I was in high school.

You may ask why the Chicago White Sox, one of the fun stories of the season and a legit threat to pass Cleveland in this division, did not make the cut over such a lame division leader, but I just don’t know if I can trust the pitching long term. As silly as the Guardians are offensively, their pitching has been solidly better than the White Sox all year, and pitching projects. Cleveland probably isn’t this bad at hitting, and even if they are, they’ve limited scoring to the point where I can reasonably bank of them for the division. That, by default, puts them in the fifth-best spot. God, what a mess.

4. Toronto Blue Jays

Made Up Award: The Two-outs away from winning the World Series Award for 2026 hangover

From the first All-Star voting returns, you’d think that the Blue Jays were on 116-win pace. Imagine my surprise when I learned they not only had a losing record, but probably should be even worse than they are. Coming off the crushing World Series loss, the Blue Jays have had nothing offensively, cratering from over five to just over four runs per game from 2025 to 2026. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is having a notable down year, and it’s no longer too early to worry about.

Pitching has been alright, and Dylan Cease looks like he was worth the cash the Jays shelled out to bring him in. But guys we’re four teams in, this is our third AL East team and they aren’t even above .500. That’s the energy we’re bringing to this World Series revenge tour. That is not the energy you want in that situation.

3. Tampa Bay Rays

Made Up Award: The Metaphysics Award for the team that is not good on paper but is fourth by default

I wrote many more words than should be allowed about how MLB’s bunting boom was a Tampa Bay Rays-filled load of nothing, and their offensive cool down has shown just such a situation. They have basically been middle of the road since that piece came out, 14-16 in their last 30 — good enough to still be number three on this list but not good enough for me to take their high-contact approach seriously. 

The Rays being twelve games over .500 with a run differential of only eight doesn’t just suggest they’re a total mirage, it ruthlessly demands it. I wanted, with every fiber of my spiritual and corporeal being, to put the Toronto Blue Jays above the Rays here just to further cement the anti-bunt agenda, but I simply could not do it. The math would not math.

2. Seattle Mariners

Made Up Award: The “I don’t even know that guy” Award for distancing themselves from the Red Sox and Astros 

There was a real chance that Boston, Houston and Seattle could make up a true Axis of Meh after all three got off to abysmal starts. Credit to the Mariners, though, for turning things around while their friends continued down the path to the dark side. The Astros are actually not all that far back from the Mariners, but if we’re just talking trend lines? The Mariners are your dark horse AL team. Yes, we have a “dark horse” at number two on the list. I never said this would be a chill experience.

The Mariners started out the season essentially unable to hit but with elite pitching. That’s still … basically the case, though the offense has naturally stabilized behind better performances from Julio Rodriguez and have now brought back a hopefully healthy Cal Raleigh. The latter will need to start producing some power again if the Mariners want to bring this team to October, but the theory that starting pitching = gravy when the leaves start falling mostly works for me. 

1. New York Yankees

Made Up Award: The Statcast Nerd Award for the only AL team that is actually good on paper

There are three, yes three, teams in the American League with a Pythagorean win expectation over .500, and two of them (the next two teams on the list) are barely scraping above the line. The Yankess, though, are actually underperforming: at 46-30, both FanGraphs projection models have them between three and four wins better than they actually are. In this econom—er, American League?!

There is, frankly, no possible argument for any other team to be the favorite in the AL right now beyond certain amorphous Yankees curse logistics that I wouldn’t personally take too much stock in. They have the underlying qualities of a good team, and have managed to produce enough of a cushion for themselves that Aaron Judge’s injury timetable shouldn’t be of too much concern. 

I am a believer in the long-term projection value of contact quality, and the Yankees are a contact quality machine. In an American League full of teams trying to cheat death by bunting a lot, this is where I’d invest my beans.

Brewers Reacts Survey: Priorities in the 2026 MLB Draft

Jul 13, 2025; Atlanta, GA, USA; The press waits for the start of the MLB Draft at The Coca-Cola Roxy. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images | Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Brewers fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

We’re back with another Reacts Survey, and after discussing the All-Star Game last week, we’re asking about the MLB Draft this week!

While the MLB Draft may not be as flashy as the drafts of the other Big 4 sports, it’s arguably more important due to just how many players are drafted and just how many never pan out.

The Brewers, who hold the No. 25 overall pick in this year’s draft, have become one of the better drafting teams in recent seasons. While some of their early to mid-2010s picks weren’t great, recent first-round picks include Brice Turang (2018), Garrett Mitchell (2020), and Sal Frelick and Tyler Black (2021). Top prospects in the system today also include 2024 first-rounders Braylon Payne (team No. 12) and Blake Burke (No. 15), and 2025 first-rounders Andrew Fischer (No. 6) and Brady Ebel (No. 13).

They’ve also found success in later rounds, including Cooper Pratt (2023 sixth-round pick signed away from Ole Miss), Bishop Letson (2023 11th-round pick), Marco Dinges (2024 fourth-round pick), Josh Adamczewski (2023 15th-round pick), and Luke Adams (2022 11th-round pick), all of whom rank among the team’s top prospects. That’s without even mentioning active MLB players, like Jacob Misiorowski (2022 second-round pick), Brandon Woodruff (2014 11th-round pick), and Craig Yoho (2023 eight-round pick).

Over the last 10 years, the Brewers have heavily emphasized position players with their first-round picks. Since 2016, Milwaukee has had 15 picks in the first round (including Competitive Balance picks); of those, two were pitchers, five were outfielders, five were left-side infielders, and three were right-side infielders.

Beyond the No. 25 pick, the Brewers also have picks No. 66, 102, 130, and 163, as well as one pick in each of the last 15 rounds (20 picks total).

The draft is less than three weeks away, beginning Saturday, July 11 in Philadelphia and wrapping up the next day. Which position would you like to see the Brewers prioritize in the draft? Weigh in below, and stay tuned for results later this week!

Former Kings Coach D.J. Smith Joins Oilers Coaching Staff Under Mike Babcock

D.J. Smith’s coaching career has already taken a few turns through the NHL, junior hockey, and back again — and now it’s leading him into a new role with a familiar face on a new bench.

The Edmonton Oilers announced Tuesday that Smith has been hired as an assistant coach under Mike Babcock, adding another experienced voice to the staff as he continues his NHL coaching journey.

The 49-year-old Smith most recently spent time with the Los Angeles Kings, where he stepped in as interim head coach from March 1 through the end of the 2025–26 regular season. He helped guide the club to an 11–6–6 finish during that stretch after initially joining the organization as an assistant in early 2024 before being elevated midseason to replace the fired Jim Hiller, who has since been hired to lead the Toronto Maple Leafs. 

The move to Edmonton reunites Smith with Babcock, under whom he began his NHL coaching career as an assistant with the Leafs in 2015. He spent four seasons in Toronto during a formative stretch of the club’s rebuild before eventually landing his first NHL head coaching opportunity.

Smith took over the Ottawa Senators in 2019 and spent parts of five seasons behind the bench, overseeing a long rebuild. Over 317 games, he compiled a 131-154-32 record, ranking second in franchise history in total wins among head coaches despite the team’s overall inconsistency under his tutelage.

Before his NHL coaching career, Smith built his reputation in junior hockey. He joined the Windsor Spitfires coaching staff in 2005 and spent eight seasons there, helping the program capture two Memorial Cup championships.

He later took over the Oshawa Generals in 2012 and quickly turned them into contenders, leading them to an OHL championship and a dominant Memorial Cup title in 2015.

Smith’s path to coaching began as a player. Drafted 41st overall by the New York Islanders in 1995, his rights were later moved to the Toronto Maple Leafs in a 1996 trade.

As a defenseman, he appeared in 45 NHL games split between Toronto and the Colorado Avalanche, while spending most of his playing career in the AHL, where he logged 393 games over nine seasons.

Now with another NHL opportunity in Edmonton, Smith continues a coaching career that has steadily moved between development roles, head coaching responsibilities, and now back into a senior assistant position on a contender’s staff.

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Dodgers outfielder Kyle Tucker leaves game with low back spasms

MINNEAPOLIS — Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Kyle Tucker was removed from the game against the Minnesota Twins in the second inning with low back spasms.

Tucker walked with one out in the second and lightly ran to second base on Tommy Edman’s single to right field. Then, Tucker was replaced by pinch-runner Alex Call. Tucker stayed in the dugout, standing up next to the dugout fence before heading into the clubhouse after the inning was over.

“I really felt it when I went out for defense in between innings in the first,” Tucker said. “Went out there and just tried to hope that it could kind of calm down, or go away or something and I could just keep playing through it. … On the bases and stuff, it was kind of still sticking around, still kind of there.”

Manager Dave Roberts said he considers Tucker day-to-day. The outfielder said, “just got to kind of see how it goes tomorrow,” regarding his status.

After signing a four-year, $240 million contract with Los Angeles in January, Tucker has played in 75 of the Dodgers’ 79 games this season. But he’s hit just .234 with six home runs and four RBIs. The .234 average is his lowest since hitting .141 in 28 games as a rookie in Houston in 2018. He’s hit at least 22 homers in each of the past five seasons.

The Dodgers also pulled catcher Dalton Rushing in the bottom of the third to rule out a concussion. Roberts said Rushing passed concussion testing, but the catcher has to retake the test 24 hours later and likely will be out of the lineup. He was replaced by Chuckie Robinson and Roberts said the team likely will add another player in case Rushing is unavailable.

Los Angeles already was without No. 1 catcher Will Smith, who is on the 10-day IL with neck inflammation.